In the Babi Yar ravine (Ukrainian: Babyn Yar), 7 kilometres north of the city centre of the Ukrainian capital Kiev (Ukrainian: Kyiv), several memorials are dedicated to those murdered in the largest mass shooting of Jews during the Second World War. In September 1941, Einsatzgruppe C (mobile killing squad) shot at least 33,000 Jews in Babi Yar.
History
Around 220,000 Jews lived in Kiev before it was occupied by German troops, making up a little under a quarter of the population. About 70,000 Jews fled from the approaching German Wehrmacht to the East. On September 19, 1941, the 6th Army of the Wehrmacht occupied Kiev. They were followed by Sonderkommando 4a (special unit) and shortly afterwards the entire Einsatzgruppe C (mobile killing squad). The local Wehrmacht and SS leaders began planning the murder of the Kiev Jews under the pretense of retaliation measures for bomb attacks on several buildings undertaken by the retreating NKVD. City commander major general Kurt Eberhard explicitly agreed to the murder plans - according to a report of the SS, the Wehrmacht demanded »radical measures«. On the morning of September 29, the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, the Jews of Kiev had to gather for their supposed »resettlement«. Over 33,000 Jewish women, children and men were chased to the Babi Yar ravine on Kiev's outskirts by Sonderkommando 4a of Einsatzgruppe C, who were assisted by Ukranian militia and Wehrmacht soldiers. There the Jews had to undress and submit their valuables. They were then forced to line up in rows of ten and stand at the edge of the ravine. Members of Sonderkommando 4a shot them with machine guns. The murders lasted the entire next day, afterwards military sappers blew up the ravine. The SS also regularly murdered prisoners of war and Romanies at Babi Yar. In the summer of 1943, Paul Blobel returned to Babi Yar with Sonderkommando 1005. This unit's task was to destroy evidence of the murders before the invasion of the approaching Red Army: Jewish forced labourers had to dig up and incinerate the decaying corpses. The massacre of Babi Yar is considered the single largest mass shooting of the Holocaust.
Victims
According to their own records, members the Einsatzgruppe C murdered 33.771 Jewish children, women and men in Babi Yar between September 29 and 30, 1941.
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Ukraine
Ukraine, the second-largest Republic in the European part of the former Soviet Union, was at the centre of the Second World War and the Holocaust. It is estimated that five to six million Ukrainians died during the war, including around 630,000 Jews.
In mid-September 1939, following the Soviet occupation of eastern Poland in accordance with the Hitler-Stalin Pact – a secret German-Soviet agreement –, the south-east of Poland became part of the Soviet Ukraine. The oppression of the local population was now an everyday occurrence. In summer 1941, the German attack on the Soviet Union initially affected these very regions. Right from the start of the invasion the Jewish population was accused of supporting the Soviet powers and became the target of brutal attacks. These attacks were often the work of nationalist Ukrainians, who initially welcomed the advance of the Wehrmacht. German SS Einsatzgruppen and allied Rumanian units soon began to carry out mass shootings of Jews. The Babyn Yar ravine near Kiev, where German units and Ukrainian militia murdered over 33,700 Jews over two days in September 1941, has since become a global symbol of the genocide of Jews. The non-Jewish population was also a target for persecution. National Socialist racist ideology classed Ukrainians, as all »Slavs«, as »subhuman«. The occupiers looted the country, deported way over one million civilians to carry out forced labour and publicly executed hostages. By 1943 a partisan war against the Wehrmacht was raging along with the campaign of the nationalist »Ukrayinska Povstanska Armiya« (Ukrainian Rebel Army or UPA) against the Soviets and the Polish population in western Ukraine. The number of Poles to die in the process lies way over 100,000. From 1944 the Ukraine was again part of the Soviet Union and also encompassed former territories in eastern Poland. The UPA continued its campaign until the mid-1950s. The Soviet authorities deported around 300,000 Ukrainians to Siberia to counter the resistance.
The Ukrainian culture of memory was aligned with the symbolic forms of remembrance found in the Soviet Union. Monumental sites of memory were constructed to celebrate the »victory« in the Great Patriotic War. It is only recently that victims have been remembered alongside the venerated heroes. In addition, a culture of memory centred on the campaign of the UPA has emerged in western Ukraine, with the UPA’s legacy being interpreted as a struggle for independence. Confrontation with anti-semitism and the collaboration with the German occupiers has only begun around 2000. With just a few exceptions, the mass shootings of Jews were ignored until the 1980s. It was not until 1991 that the government of independent Ukraine acknowledged Babyn Yar as a »symbol of Jewish martyrdom«. Long after gaining independence, Ukraine was still on the search for its national identity. The documentation of Soviet crimes – for example the state’s responsibility for the Great Famine (Holodomor) in 1922-23 that led to millions of deaths – has more significance in the establishment of a Ukrainian identity than learning about the Holocaust. Nevertheless, new memorial sites for the murdered Jews were established throughout the country, such as Drobitskiy Yar in Kharkiv or the Holocaust Museum in Odessa. On many mass grave sites new memorials were created, partially with German support. In Kiev, a new grand memorial site with global relevance was planned at Babyn Yar. These plans were put on hold with the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022. What impact the current defensive war will have on Holocaust remembrance in the future remains to be seen.
Remembrance
For decades after the end of the Second World War, no monument was erected in Babi Yar. Instead, Ukrainian communist party leaders had the ravine levelled in 1962 and established a park on the site. Upon pressure exerted by survivors and from abroad, a memorial was dedicated on September 29, 1976, the 35th anniversary of the murders. Since the park from the 1960's is on the site of the ravine, the authorities set up the memorial further away from Babi Yar and marked the former outline of the ravine with dug out channels. The inscription on the memorial does not mention Jewish victims. In 1991, the first official commemoration ceremony dedicated to the Jewish victims of Babi Yar took place, and an inscription to honour the murdered Jews of Kiev was added. Moreover, a stone menorah was set up in the vicinity of the former ravine. Since then several different memorial sculptures, crosses and signs were erected at the site, for instance in 2001 in the memory of the murdered children or in 2016 to honor the Roma victims. To this date, however, there is no central memorial or information centre at the site. This is set to change in 2023, when the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center is due to open.